Capital Celluloid 2019 - Day 103: Sat Apr 13

Being John Malkovich (Jonze, 1999): Screen on the Green, 11.30pm


This screening is part of the Saturday late-night movies season at the Everyman Screen on the Green in Islington. Here are all the details.

Chicago Reader review:
This outrageous comic fantasy may not sustain its brilliance, but it keeps cooking for so much of that time that I don't have many complaints. The first feature of both screenwriter/executive producer Charlie Kaufman and director Spike Jonze, it charts the complications that ensue when an out-of-work puppeteer (John Cusack) gets a filing job on the surrealistically cramped seventh and a half floor of an office building, where he discovers a hidden tunnel that allows its occupant to become actor John Malkovich (playing himself, natch) for 15 minutes before being ejected onto the New Jersey Turnpike. Things get even wilder when the filing clerk and his wife (Cameron Diaz as a pet-store employee) both get the hots for the same woman (Catherine Keener), who has comparable lust for the wife as long as she's inside Malkovich. What's great about this lunatic farce (1999) isn't only its premises about sexual and professional identity but also the spirited way the actors and filmmakers flesh them out. With Orson Bean and Mary Kay Place.

Jonathan Rosenabum 

Here (and above) is the trailer.

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